Plant-based meat alternatives have come a long way from the worthy-but-woolly veggie sausages of the 1990s. Today’s burgers, sausages, mince and nuggets can look, sizzle and chew remarkably like meat.
But does that make them a healthier choice, or just a more convincing ultra-processed food?
In this episode, we’ll explain why “plant-based” is too broad a label to trust on its own. We’ll separate genuinely health-supportive plant proteins, such as beans, lentils, tofu and tempeh, from ultra-processed meat mimics designed to replicate the eating experience of burgers, sausages and nuggets.
We’ll look at what short-term trials show when people replace meat with plant-based meat, including the encouraging signals for LDL cholesterol, fibre intake and body weight. Then we’ll step back and ask the bigger question: do those short-term improvements prove long-term health benefit?
Most importantly, we’ll show why the real comparator matters. A plant-based sausage replacing a pork sausage may be a useful step. A plant-based sausage replacing lentils, fish, tofu or a minimally processed meal probably isn’t.
By the end, you’ll have a simple rule: judge the swap, not the slogan.










